Cryptosaurus

4K posts

Cryptosaurus

Cryptosaurus

@Cryptosaurus__

No FInancial advice. Dabble in Crypto. Only fundementals. Care very little about technical analysis.

Entrou em Eylül 2020
2K Seguindo447 Seguidores
Tweet fixado
Cryptosaurus
Cryptosaurus@Cryptosaurus__·
This suggests that $BONK has significant room for growth. Specifically, $BONK could potentially grow up to 7 times its current market capitalization if all other factors remain constant. NFA.
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The Kobeissi Letter
The Kobeissi Letter@KobeissiLetter·
Commodities are rising 5%+ each across the board almost every day now. Gold, silver, copper, platinum, all at record highs. Energy prices are rebounding and the S&P 500 is at 7,000. When we said, “own assets or be left behind,” this is exactly what we meant.
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Chess Feed
Chess Feed@chess_feed·
White to move, mate in 2!
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Cryptosaurus
Cryptosaurus@Cryptosaurus__·
@MilkRoadAI All these metal trades will struggle to find counterparties to sell. All metal trades taken in 2025/26 will also be rekt.
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Milk Road AI
Milk Road AI@MilkRoadAI·
Forget Nvidia. Forget Crypto (Save this video). The smartest trade for 2026 might be rocks? Chamath makes a terrifyingly simple case for a Copper supercycle: A 70% supply shortage is coming and there is no Plan B.
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Cryptosaurus
Cryptosaurus@Cryptosaurus__·
@Sai_Ishaya_ Felt the same
Cryptosaurus@Cryptosaurus__

@jmwind Amazing you had the opportunity to interview the former governor of Bank of England after he served that role. And that you had to Google him. And I absolutely believe everything you wrote.

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Sai Ishaya
Sai Ishaya@Sai_Ishaya_·
Mark Carney's CV before this interview: Education: BA Economics, Harvard University, 1988. MPhil Economics, Oxford University, 1993 DPhil Economics, Oxford University 1995. Professional Experience: -Goldman Sachs (1988–2003) +Roles included Roles included Co-Head of Sovereign Risk, Executive Director (Debt Capital Markets), Vice President (Corporate Finance) and Managing Director. -Deputy Governor, Bank of Canada. -Senior associate Deputy Minister of finance. -Governor Bank of Canada -Governor, Bank of England And this is all a "decent" CV
Jean-Michel Lemieux@jmwind

I interviewed Mark Carney for a job. It was 2021. We were looking to bring in a board member or executive who could help us think about entrepreneurship in the context of the global economy. I was asked to interview a guy named Mark. I Googled him. He had a decent CV. In our call after brief introductions, he jumped straight in and said, “I see on Strava that you’re a runner and you live in...” It threw me off a bit. He had clearly done his homework. Borderline stalking. We talked about running for a while. He was good at small talk. He casually mentioned that he runs marathons now and then. Mental note: he does his homework. Also, is he distracting me so I do not get to my questions? I started worrying he would try to schmooze me instead of getting into anything substantive. In my defence, I had done some homework too. I had not stalked him on social media, but I had read several articles he had written. I learned that he leaned strongly globalist and believed that most of our challenges do not respect borders and will only be solved collaboratively. I wanted to see if he could argue against his own position. More specifically, I asked when countries should invest in self-reliance. For context, I explained how, in software, we have learned that purely centralized systems fail in obvious ways. But overly distributed systems fail too, when small issues propagate across too many dependencies. I asked whether societies behave the same way. Are we sometimes too decentralized? When should countries accept less efficiency and invest in more centralization or self-reliance? He smiled. I could not tell whether he thought the question was childish or whether I had annoyed him. Then he broke the silence and said, “This is a great parallel. Give me a second to think about it.” We ended up having a great conversation. That said, it took him a lot of words to make his point. Professional talker. He liked the exercise. I could tell he had spent so long defending global collaboration that he had not fully prepared for this angle. I did not know it at the time, but he was in the middle of writing Value(s), which is essentially an ode to global cooperation. We went over time. It did not faze him. He cared about finishing the discussion. At that point he was improvising, and it felt natural and fun. It was a genuinely thoughtful discussion. I learned a lot. In the end, he did not join us. But we all wanted him to. When I see him in his current gig, a small part of me laughs that I might have helped warm him up. The more I think about that conversation, the clearer it becomes that he probably did not want his current Prime Minister role. Not in the way people want promotions or titles. Some people spend a lifetime preparing for problems they hope never arrive. When the moment shows up anyway, they step in. Not because it is appealing, but because it is necessary. This just happened to be his moment.

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Cryptosaurus
Cryptosaurus@Cryptosaurus__·
@mert @luigidemeo Because it looks fancy. Makes it look like AI in a box. It’s just useless AI hype that will die in a week time.
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mert
mert@mert·
@luigidemeo I dont understand why the mini is necessary, you are already giving it access to pretty much everything what am I missing?
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Luigi D'Onorio DeMeo
Luigi D'Onorio DeMeo@luigidemeo·
Clawdbot is the first time I really thought AI would change everything. Still early days for me, but one setup that's surprisingly useful: I have it running on a spare Mac Mini as my "background dev + life admin" agent, connected mainly via Telegram (quick from phone) and previously Slack. Cool example that's saved me real time lately: I set it up to monitor my Claude coding sessions and handle the loop autonomously when I'm away from keyboard. Workflow goes like this: - I kick off a project in Claude (e.g., building a quick tool for flight price scraping across providers). - When I hit a snag or want it to iterate (fix failing tests, add error handling, refactor), I just message it in Telegram: "Continue the flight-cli branch: tests are failing on provider X, try patching with retries + better logging. Commit when green." - Clawdbot pulls the repo (via its shell/browser tools), opens VS Code or whatever, runs the tests, sees the failures, thinks step-by-step (I set thinking to high), generates fixes, applies them, re-runs, commits/pushes if clean, and pings me back: "Fixed, pushed commit abc123. Tests passing. Next?" - If it needs more context (e.g., "Why did that API change?"), it browses the provider docs, extracts relevant bits, and includes them in the reply. Bonus: It also watches my calendar + traffic APIs in the background. If I'm heading to an IRL thing like kids sports practice or a meeting and traffic looks bad, it messages me 30 mins early: "Leave in ~15 min to make it on time – current ETA 28 min via Google Maps." It's not flawless, sometimes it over-thinks a simple fix or needs a nudge... but it's handling multi-step dev loops without me context-switching every 5 mins. Inbox side: it's quietly unsubscribing junk and drafting short replies on low-priority threads, so my Gmail isn't a warzone when I check. All local, no cloud leakage, costs basically zero beyond the Claude API I was already paying for. Setup was straightforward. If you're into self-hosted agents that actually execute instead of just chatting, give it a spin.🦞 clawd.bot / github.com/clawdbot/clawd…)
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Cryptosaurus
Cryptosaurus@Cryptosaurus__·
@WatcherGuru @cz_binance Every time we tried predicting super cycle, we were doomed. Anyways, after 4 long years wait, we will have 2022 all over again. Time to buy, end of 2026.
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Watcher.Guru
Watcher.Guru@WatcherGuru·
JUST IN: Binance Founder CZ predicts Bitcoin will enter a supercycle this year.
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Philosophy Of Physics
Philosophy Of Physics@PhilosophyOfPhy·
Quantum physics shows us that nothing is fixed until we observe it. Before awareness touches it, it's all pure possibility. ( 🎥 dr.theresabullard / IG )
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Cryptosaurus
Cryptosaurus@Cryptosaurus__·
@arthur0x In crypto for over a decade and it is sad to admit there is absolutely no incentive left for any retail participation. The end happened much faster than we all anticipated. The only powerful use case is store of value and why would you store value in anything other than Bitcoin.
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Cryptosaurus
Cryptosaurus@Cryptosaurus__·
@jmwind Amazing you had the opportunity to interview the former governor of Bank of England after he served that role. And that you had to Google him. And I absolutely believe everything you wrote.
GIF
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Jean-Michel Lemieux
Jean-Michel Lemieux@jmwind·
I interviewed Mark Carney for a job. It was 2021. We were looking to bring in a board member or executive who could help us think about entrepreneurship in the context of the global economy. I was asked to interview a guy named Mark. I Googled him. He had a decent CV. In our call after brief introductions, he jumped straight in and said, “I see on Strava that you’re a runner and you live in...” It threw me off a bit. He had clearly done his homework. Borderline stalking. We talked about running for a while. He was good at small talk. He casually mentioned that he runs marathons now and then. Mental note: he does his homework. Also, is he distracting me so I do not get to my questions? I started worrying he would try to schmooze me instead of getting into anything substantive. In my defence, I had done some homework too. I had not stalked him on social media, but I had read several articles he had written. I learned that he leaned strongly globalist and believed that most of our challenges do not respect borders and will only be solved collaboratively. I wanted to see if he could argue against his own position. More specifically, I asked when countries should invest in self-reliance. For context, I explained how, in software, we have learned that purely centralized systems fail in obvious ways. But overly distributed systems fail too, when small issues propagate across too many dependencies. I asked whether societies behave the same way. Are we sometimes too decentralized? When should countries accept less efficiency and invest in more centralization or self-reliance? He smiled. I could not tell whether he thought the question was childish or whether I had annoyed him. Then he broke the silence and said, “This is a great parallel. Give me a second to think about it.” We ended up having a great conversation. That said, it took him a lot of words to make his point. Professional talker. He liked the exercise. I could tell he had spent so long defending global collaboration that he had not fully prepared for this angle. I did not know it at the time, but he was in the middle of writing Value(s), which is essentially an ode to global cooperation. We went over time. It did not faze him. He cared about finishing the discussion. At that point he was improvising, and it felt natural and fun. It was a genuinely thoughtful discussion. I learned a lot. In the end, he did not join us. But we all wanted him to. When I see him in his current gig, a small part of me laughs that I might have helped warm him up. The more I think about that conversation, the clearer it becomes that he probably did not want his current Prime Minister role. Not in the way people want promotions or titles. Some people spend a lifetime preparing for problems they hope never arrive. When the moment shows up anyway, they step in. Not because it is appealing, but because it is necessary. This just happened to be his moment.
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qw
qw@QwQiao·
2nd best way to get exposure to anthropic is to buy amzn (primary cloud provider) best way is to get private shares on @PreStocks
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Cryptosaurus
Cryptosaurus@Cryptosaurus__·
@ErikVoorhees It really is just local storage. Vectors are stored locally in unsecured enclave and sent to remotely hosted models. Your data leaves the local machine anyways. It’s just a fugazi claim.
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Cryptosaurus
Cryptosaurus@Cryptosaurus__·
@popalorena It’s not fair play. It was rude and disrespectful. The entire court was silent. You never talk between serves specially when the first one is a fault. Bad sportsmanship.
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Molly O’Shea
Molly O’Shea@MollySOShea·
BREAKING: Zipline Raises $600M+ at $7.6 Billion Valuation, Surpassing 2,000,000+ Commercial Deliveries Becoming the world’s largest commercial autonomous delivery system. @zipline CEO Keller Rinaudo Cliffton (@Keller) joins Sourcery to break it all down Backed by Fidelity, Baillie Gifford, Valor, & Tiger Global, Zipline is entering a major U.S. & global scaling phase. The company was most recently valued at ~$5B in 2024, making this a meaningful step up. Highlights (00:00) Keller Rinaudo Cliffton, Co-Founder & CEO, Zipline (01:11) The Cow Ranch origin story and Zipline’s latest fundraise (06:42) Zipline, the world’s largest commercial autonomous system (08:32) Alfred Lin (@Alfred_Lin) & @sequoia's early bet (10:59) Building healthcare logistics that actually work (16:02) Why Zipline doesn’t need marketing? (20:23) Legos, rotisserie chickens, and delivering almost everything (22:51) When off-the-shelf hardware isn’t good enough (26:55) Defense interest & why Zipline stays commercially focused (29:47) What is Zipline’s “magical portal” model? (32:17) A simple decision that saved Zipline (37:17) Hiring mission-driven builders from Tesla & SpaceX (39:20) Learning how to scale from Tesla’s former CFO (41:28) The trillion-dollar path: 50B deliveries at 10x frequency (44:59) Expanding Africa operations with strong US government backing (47:33) Why this is the best time to be alive
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Rothmus 🏴
Rothmus 🏴@Rothmus·
Energy is everything.
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Cryptosaurus
Cryptosaurus@Cryptosaurus__·
@realBigBrainAI That’s one of the smartest takes on the future of AI. Very Vitalikish.
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Big Brain AI
Big Brain AI@realBigBrainAI·
Jonathan Ross, Founder and CEO of AI chip company Groq, offers a contrarian view: AI won't destroy jobs, it will create a labour shortage. He outlines three things that will happen because of AI: First, massive deflationary pressure. "This cup of coffee is going to cost less. Your housing is going to cost less. Everything is going to cost less." He explains this will happen through robots farming coffee more efficiently and better supply chain management, meaning people will need less money. Second, people will opt out of the economy. "They're going to work fewer hours. They're going to work fewer days a week, and they're going to work fewer years. They're going to retire earlier because they're going to be able to support their lifestyle working less." Third, entirely new jobs and industries will emerge. Jonathan points to history as evidence: "Think about 100 years ago. 98% of the workforce in the United States was in agriculture. When we were able to reduce that to 2%, we found things for those other 98% of the population to do." He continues: "The jobs that are going to exist 100 years from now, we can't even contemplate." Software developers didn't exist a century ago. In another century, they won't exist either, "because everyone's going to be vibe coding." The same applies to influencers, a career that would have been unthinkable 100 years ago but now earns people millions. His conclusion: deflationary pressure, workforce opt-outs, and new industries we can't yet imagine will combine to create one outcome... "We're not going to have enough people."
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Paul Couvert
Paul Couvert@itsPaulAi·
This is so good 🔥 You can run this new model on a laptop which is: - 100% open source - Only 3B active parameters (!!) - Way better than GPT-OSS - Perfect for vibe coding (and more) And already available for free on Hugging Face or via API. Open source models keep winning!
Z.ai@Zai_org

Introducing GLM-4.7-Flash: Your local coding and agentic assistant. Setting a new standard for the 30B class, GLM-4.7-Flash balances high performance with efficiency, making it the perfect lightweight deployment option. Beyond coding, it is also recommended for creative writing, translation, long-context tasks, and roleplay. Weights: huggingface.co/zai-org/GLM-4.… API: docs.z.ai/guides/overvie… - GLM-4.7-Flash: Free (1 concurrency) - GLM-4.7-FlashX: High-Speed and Affordable

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IM David Shahinyan
IM David Shahinyan@ImShahinyan·
Tricky puzzle! White mates in 1😮
IM David Shahinyan tweet media
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